I loved Safari when Apple moved the tabs to the top. I was pissed when in the final release, after months of using the beta, Apple removed the even the option to put them up top. That was a very unAPple like move actually listening to the designed challenged masses to know what they liked.

Yet, Chrome calls home every ten minutes and it handles java script poorly. iCab? Seriously? You might as well start pulling out Omniweb.

Firefox 4 has come a long way.

Quote:

Originally Posted by myapplelove

sorry guys but safari has become pretty boring, and a bit of a dog, I hate to say it but google is way more tempting the way things are.

Put tabs on top, lose that all monochromatic flavour, make tabs close en masse easily like chrome, try optimizing it so extensions dont slow it down, etc. etc.

I don't see any flair with safari any more, icab and chrome are easily surpassing it.

Yeah that short period of tabs on top was pretty great once one got used to them - widescreens do not laptop resolutions taller make, and it was a really nice vertical saving, and nicely implemented I thought. And certainly no more against UI guidelines than the Mac AppStore's titlebar-cum-toolbar.

i toyed with an earlier release of the big kitty - am pleased to see apple still adding and refining as well as listening to dev feedback (the modification of the slider tabs for example)

this pop up seems pretty neat and wouldn't be surprised if it sows up in other parts of the os - i'd love for them to se something similar for finder notifications and disk activity - always end up losing the file transfer windows - having them collected in one place would make sense

At first, I was going to dismiss Lion of being just some useless spit and polish on a DVD. Though, all these recent articles are making me want to upgrade to it! I might wait until the 10.7.1 update before I actually commit to it - twas a bad Ideal with snow leopard when I tried it!

Not everyone will be using the same size monitor, or will have the same resolution.

Do you think a 13" Macbook will be the same as a 27" iMac? Of course not! There is no way that Apple can accommodate all of their computers with a high Rez display. And those of us with Mac Pro's are not likely going to be using Apple monitors for any serious work.

Apple will need to have resolutions based on the size of the monitor, as they do now. And with all the developers out there, there will be the same confusion as before when looking at something at the misnamed "100%". 100% of what? We never know that, and we won't know now either, except that it will be smaller on the screen than before.

RI is supposed to allow us to size the screen elements as WE like them, not as Apple likes them. That's the whole point. What may look good to your eyes, won't necessarily look good to mine.

Its just like now, Mel. There are many monitor types and sizes but thy all fall within a DPI range that makes them usable. With double resolution option in the OS and SDK you can then double the resolution and keep the same window.

Dick Applebaum on whether the iPad is a personal computer: "BTW, I am posting this from my iPad pc while sitting on the throne... personal enough for you?"

I like the popup button for Downloads rather than the current separate window.
( I was also glad that TextEdit moves basic highlighting widgets out of the palette window into the main app window ).

Not so sure about the button only appearing after you have downloaded something.
Consistency is important for learning/awareness of new features.
Also, knowing that nothing has been downloaded is good information.

Many of the most important software concepts were invented in the 70s and forgotten in the 80s.

The more elements that serve multiple purposes (direct multi-touch, mouse, clickpad) the better. The action I'd like to see integrated would be a "hover over" action for multi-touch. I hate not having that extra level of drill-down when I need it before I choose to tap on something.

I completely agree. The implementation of this that I like the most isn't even in the OS -- it's on Netflix. Hovering over a film name or mini-poster will bring up a description of the movie and some other relevant information so I can decide if I'm want to know more. That's super helpful, intuitive and speeds the browsing process up considerably. Now I go to other sites and hover my cursor waiting for information to pop up that never does. I'm always disappointed thinking "why not? it's so helpful and (once you've used it) obvious. why isn't it standard everywhere?"

I would love to see THAT UI concept put to use by Apple in a user controllable way.

It’s just like now, Mel. There are many monitor types and sizes but thy all fall within a DPI range that makes them usable. With double resolution option in the OS and SDK you can then double the resolution and keep the same window.

It will be just like now. You were saying that this would solve the problem before.

Right now, it's a very big problem. There is no rhyme or reason to the differing resolutions vs screen size. And I have to disagree, the ppi is all over the place. A 17" screen with 1920 x 1080, or a 21.5" screen with the same Rez. Then there are 24" screens with the same rez. What sense is that? My 27" with 2560 x 1400 is very high, and has a minuscule menu bar. We can't do anything about that.

RI is the only to resolve (ha, a pun!) that issue, and we all know that.

It will be just like now. You were saying that this would solve the problem before.

Right now, it's a very big problem. There is no rhyme or reason to the differing resolutions vs screen size. And I have to disagree, the ppi is all over the place. A 17" screen with 1920 x 1080, or a 21.5" screen with the same Rez. Then there are 24" screens with the same rez. What sense is that? My 27" with 2560 x 1400 is very high, and has a minuscule menu bar. We can't do anything about that.

RI is the only to resolve (ha, a pun!) that issue, and we all know that.

If lion doesn't address ri it will be ludicrous. Particularly the small airs and the 27" imacs are deformed in terms of ui elements. The menu bar was never meant to be as small as that on the 27" imac, safari bookmarks page is almost unreadable... it's just being backward and not having ri.